] 01 -
I knew the perfect place. About seventy miles west of the city there was a farming and ranching community I'd discovered as a Boy Scout. It was a little town called Wessel, pronounced "vessel", since the name came from a German city near the Rhein River. It really wasn't much of a town, just the intersection of two Texas farm-to-market roads. Wessel had a convenience store with a few tables where a local could cool off with a Shiner Beer, a sleepy post office, and an ancient church with a cemetery and community center where once a month they held dances.
The area was dotted with fields of sorghum and corn and small ranches that ran a few dozen cattle. It was gently rolling country with frequent outcroppings of sandstone. Oak, pecan, and cedars grew in isolated islands among the green pastures and dark tilled earth. Most of the settlers to the area had been Germans and Czechs, migrating from Middle Europe in the 1870s, sprinkled in with Hispanics and blacks.
When we had a wet spring, the land was filled with wildflowers and would make a great backdrop for my photographs. Well, March had been wetter than usual. I looked on-line at a web site that charted wildflower blooming and saw that, as I hoped, Wessel would be in peak coloration during my spring break.
I got all my gear together the night before. I also had a bag of accessories. My last item was my grandfather's old .22 pistol. I didn't expect to run into any snakes, but it's always possible. Mom selected some outfits. I didn't know what she chose, feeling that there would be more spontaneity in my photographs this way. She also prepared a picnic basket so we were able to get an early start Saturday morning.
It was a pleasant drive out the interstate. The weather was beautiful, bright sunshine with mild temperatures. Traffic was light. We made good time. By 10:00 we were in Wessel.
"Where to?" mom asked as we sat at the intersection.
"Six of one, half a dozen of the other."
"My son, the leader." She turned left.
The road wound through gentle hills. It was a good road, well maintained with wide shoulders for the passage of farm equipment. I would have loved to drive it in a Camaro or Mustang convertible. Or a big motorcycle. Despite the soft springing of the family SUV, mom was even getting a thrill from throwing the vehicle around the curves, surging up the hills, diving into the small valleys.
Once we passed under a railroad overpass on which someone had spray painted a notice: 'Welcome to Hooterville.' I laughed at that and pointed it out to mom.
She said, "I didn't notice that, but did you see the highway sign for the overpass that said 'Watch out for water under bridge?'
"That's even better."
The road continued its sinuous ways. Mom was admiring the view while I was looking for the right photogenic spot.
"Whoa!" mom cried suddenly as we topped an incline. She braked quickly. The terrain had opened up before us, exposing a green swath of land that stretched from north to south. From our height, we could see for miles. Everywhere was the green with splotches of dark bluebonnets and small areas of bright Indian paintbrushes. These were about bloomed out, but ranged from orange to deep crimson. Stands of oak were darker. Black angus, beige longhorns, and red Herefords dotted the pastures.
"There to the right," I pointed. The flowers in that direction were thickest. A cattle tank, a bulldozed pond of water, glinted blue. Also, among a stand of tall pecan trees, there was an old barn faded by decades of weather and sun. "That looks perfect."
"I think you're right."
Mom followed the road till we got to a track leading across the pasture. It was protected by a cattleguard that rattled as we rode over it. On the fence post at the guard was a metal sign, only mildly perforated by bullet holes, saying that the property owner was a member of the Texas Cattleman's Association. There was a sign forbidding trespassing that mom ignored. It's an old Texas custom that if a rancher didn't want picnickers using his property, he put up a gate: gates are for people, cattleguards are livestock.
Mom took the track, driving slowly. Except for one well hung bull, the cattle we passed barely paid us any attention. They were healthy looking bovines with several calves sticking close to their mamas.
Before we got to the barn, we saw a two wheel path going off to the left. It didn't go far, but stopped a copse of trees. I asked mom to drive that way. She swung off the track and drove thirty yards or so. That brought us to the trees. Among them was the remains of a house. It was partially overgrown, but still showed a couple of stone walls and a hearth with chimney.
"Let's start here."
"All right," mom agreed. She stopped the vehicle and got out. I went around the back of the SUV and opened the tailgate. I pulled our bundles out and hefted the camera bag over my shoulder.
"I'm going to get some shots while you decide what you want to wear."
"OK. I have just the thing. No peeking while I change."
"Yep." I headed off to the ruins. The walls, what remained of them, were slabs of sandstone. The floor was of the same material. The fireplace was brick. Any roof had long ago rotted away. The building was maybe twenty feet square. If it had been subdivided into rooms, the interior walls had gone the way of the roof. It was surrounded by low scrub and cacti.
On the ground I found a long sturdy oak tree branch. I set down my camera bag, took out my pistol, and checked the bore after locking back the slide. Seeing that there were no obstructions, I dropped the slide on the loaded magazine, chambering the top cartridge, and pressed up the safety. Pistol in one hand, branch in the other, I thrashed about the scrub to drive away any snakes. After circling the building, I holstered the Colt pistol and set aside the stick.
I had two camera bodies, one a digital SLR and an older Pentax 35 mm single lens reflex, along with 5 lenses ranging from a 28x85 zoom to a fixed length 300 mm telephoto lens. The 35 mm camera was definitely old school, but I still like using it. Print film, for me, was simply fun to work with. I started with it and a moderately wide angle lens to get some perspective shots of the old ruins. Then I used the small zoom to get some shots of a few of the cacti that were in bloom,
By that time, my mother had changed out of her blouse and jeans into her first outfit. It was a simple plain yellow sundress with matching sandals. The dress had ruffled sleeves. a scoop neckline, and a full skirt. She carried a yellow bonnet and a white parasol that I'd brought along.
"Nice," I said, complimenting her. "Just watch where you step. This is prickly darn country."
"Oh, I don't mind a little prick now and then."
I saw my mom blush as she suddenly realized the double entendre. I was a little surprised by her comment. My mother's not one to make even unthinking jokes about pricks. I guess I should tell you about her. She's a little over medium height, maybe 5-7. She probably weighs around 140 pounds. Maybe that's a bit much by magazine model standards, but, after all, she's nearly 45. She's got frosted hair that she wears short. Her eyes are dark brown. She's got laugh lines at their edges and she laughs a lot. She photographs well.
That's why we were there that morning. I was having a one man show at school and she was my last project for the show.
I got an old blanket out of the SUV and placed it on a section of wall that was waist high. This section was in sunlight. I had my mother sit on the blanket to protect her dress from dirt. I posed her with the parasol over one shoulder. I started shooting her from several angles, using both cameras and lenses of various focal lengths.
Thirty minutes later I was done.
"Ready for a break?"
"For sure."
We walked back to the SUV and I cracked open some soft drinks. We sat on the tailgate, listening to the songbirds and making small talk.
"OK, what's next?"
I looked at the sky. The sun was gone, hidden by clouds. I mentioned that fact to my mother, adding that the conditions were just right for some pictures of her and the flowers. Filtered sunlight meant I wouldn't need to use any reflectors or fill in flash.
"OK. I want to wear this dress to start."
"Fine." I looked around. To get a better view, I stood on the tallest of the remaining stone walls. "There's a nice patch about fifty yards that way. I want to set up over there and have you walk towards me. Then we can do some tight shots of you and the flowers."
"That sounds good. Wave when you're ready."
] 02 -
The spot I'd chosen was about midway between the ruins of the house and the barn. I positioned myself on the far edge of the flowers and waved that I was set.
Mom started her approach. Maybe she didn't have any formal modeling experience, but she had a natural talent. As she walked towards me, mom varied her pace, would stop sometimes to twirl on her toes, or bend down to pick a flower. She opened and closed the parasol, carried over this shoulder or that, even ran across my field of view. I took lots of pictures of her, having her stop once while I put the longest lens on the 35 mm. That long a lens give a great depth of field at small apertures while also foreshortening the subject. I wanted just those effects before she got too close to take advantage of them.
Finally, she reached me. I took pictures of her kneeling, sitting, and even lying in the flowers. I used my shortest lens on its macro setting to take some extreme close-ups.
I gave mom a break while I reloaded the film pack on the 35 mm body. I also put a fresh flash card in the digital camera. I discovered years ago that it was better to remove a partially filled card rather than run the risk of filling it up just when you had a chance to take a perfect picture.
"Break over."
"OK." Mom got to her feet. She grabbed the hem of her dress and pulled it up. As she tossed aside the yellow dress, I saw that underneath it, she had worn a white polo shirt and shorts. "Will this work?"
"Great! You missed your true calling, mom."
"I hardly think that."
I started posing mom for another set of pictures. Mostly I duplicated the poses I'd shot earlier. The different costume presented a different aspect from the sundress.
While busily taking my photographs, I didn't notice that the sky darkened. What had been tall fluffy towers of white became dark and threatening. They came from the west, building. When I finally noticed them, they were overhead. Lightning was spitting from cloud to cloud and occasionally darting to the ground. Thunder rumbled.
Of course, my mother noticed them too. "I think we'd better head for the vehicle."
"I agree." I helped her to her feet. That's when I noticed a solid wall of rain coming across the pasture towards us. Lightning grew in strength. The sound of its passage deepened. I could smell the ozone in the air.
The rain hit us before we had even left our places.
Trying to cover up my camera as best I could, I shouted at mom, "The barn's closer."